An Alberta government bill proposing changes to freedom of information rules has passed third and final reading in the legislature despite the province’s information and privacy watchdog warning they will “significantly degrade” transparency.
The bill, now awaiting royal assent, creates a number of new exemptions for what documents can be provided to members of the public upon request.
Those new exemptions include any document created by or for the premier, government ministers or the provincial Treasury Board, including correspondence like emails.
Additional exemptions include documents containing background and factual information used in behind-the-scenes policy and legislation development, and communication between political staff and government ministers.
Last month, Alberta’s information and privacy commissioner Diane McLeod sent a letter to Service Alberta Minister Dale Nally outlining more than two dozen concerns she had about the bill.
But …